Romney, who had ended his own presidential campaign in the 2008 GOP primary, reportedly provided McCain’s team with more than 20 years of tax returns, significantly more than the amount of information Romney has made public this time around.
Democrats, in their full-court press urging Romney to release more tax returns, now ask why Romney was willing to give so many documents to McCain, but won’t do the same publicly this year. Some have questioned whether McCain saw something in Romney’s tax information four years ago that discouraged him from picking Romney as his running mate.
“Of course not,” McCain told Politico on Tuesday. “I don’t know what depths these people won’t reach. Obviously, it’s just outrageous. That’s just outrageous. It shows the — it’s so disgraceful for them to allege something that they have absolutely no knowledge of.”
McCain maintained his campaign selected Palin, who was a first-term governor of Alaska at the time, “because we thought that Sarah Palin was the better candidate.”
He continued: “Why did we not take [Tim] Pawlenty, why did we not take any of the other 10 other people. Why didn’t I? Because we had a better candidate, the same way with all the others. … Come on, why? That’s a stupid question.”
Romney has released his 2010 tax returns and an estimate for 2011, with a promise to release the official documents for last year once they’re ready. He filed an extension with the Internal Revenue Service, meaning he may not put out his returns until the October filing deadline.
McCain has consistently stood by his pick in Palin, saying she was the most qualified person and most capable of energizing the Republican Party.
“I admire and respect her and I’m proud of our campaign,” McCain said on Fox News in March, answering questions about a recent HBO film about the McCain-Palin ticket. “I’m grateful she ran with me.”